AMDM Voting Methods Performance Task
AMDM Voting Methods Performance Task
MAMDMA4: Students will analyze and evaluate the mathematics behind various methods of voting and selection.
a. Evaluate various voting and selection processes to determine an appropriate method for a given situation.
b. Apply various ranking algorithms to determine an appropriate method for a given situation.
Part 1: Voting Methods and Fairness Criteria (30 points)
Consider the following preference table involving 5 candidates:
Number of Votes
2
6
1st Choice
A
C
B
2nd Choice
E
A
E
3rd Choice
C
E
A
4th Choice
D
B
C
th
5 Choice
B
D
D
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
8
D
C
E
A
B
4
A
B
E
C
D
Determine the winner of the election using the Plurality Method. Blooms Level 3/DOK 2
Determine the winner of the election using the Borda Count Method. Blooms Level 3/DOK 2
Determine the winner of the election using the Condorcet Method. Blooms Level 3/DOK 2
Determine the winner of the election using the Plurality with Elimination Method. Blooms Level 3/DOK 2
Given your responses in a-d, determine whether the each method meets the Majority Criterion and the Condorcet
Criterion. Provide evidence for your response. Blooms Level 4/DOK 3
If candidate D drops out of the election, which, if any, of the voting methods satisfies the Irrelevant Alternatives Criterion?
Provide evidence supporting your response. Blooms Level 4/DOK 3
Suppose that the voters in the last column (who voted ABECD) change their votes to match those in the first column
(AECDB). Which, if any, of the voting methods satisfies the Monotonicity Criterion? Provide evidence supporting your
response. Blooms Level 4/DOK 3
Never (0)
Rubric for Scoring Parts 1 and 2 of Voting Methods & Fairness Criteria Performance Task
Score
Part1/Part 2
30/52
Criteria
Exemplary Response
Gives a complete response with a clear, coherent, elegant explanation and strong supporting
arguments; includes clear diagrams, examples, and/or counterexamples as appropriate; communicates
effectively to the identified audience; identifies all the important elements of the problem.
25/43
Competent Response
Gives a fairly complete response with clear explanations and solid supporting arguments, may include
diagrams; communicates effectively to the identified audience; identifies most important elements of
the problem.
20/34
Satisfactory Response
Completes the problem satisfactorily, but the explanation, the argument, and/or the diagram may be
unclear or inappropriate; understands and uses the underlying mathematical ideas effectively.
15/25
10/17
5/8
0/0
No Attempt
Makes no attempt to solve the problem.